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Hormel workers to vote on new contract

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A strike may be looming in the town that was nearly torn apart by a previous one back in 1985.

AUSTIN, Minn. — Starting on Wednesday, hundreds of Hormel meatpackers at the Austin, Minnesota plant will start voting on a new contract.

It’s all happening in a city that went through a similar situation in the 1980’s that was largely regarded as the “strike of the decade”.

“I wish every worker could just stand-up and realize that we’re the ones that make the profit,” said Dale Chidester, a former employee. “They wouldn’t be able to sell anything if it wasn’t something that we make.”

Founded in Austin, the more than 130-year-old meatpacking plant would become one of the biggest — at one point, processing a million hogs a year.

“Back then, that was everybody’s dream was to work at Hormel because you could make money,” said Chidester, who first started working at the plant in Iowa in 1977 before transferring to the Austin location two years after the last strike.

That strike started in 1985 and residents and historians will tell you it tore the community apart and made national headlines. Despite that, Chidester still thinks was worth it.

“Because that was the first time in the meatpackers that somebody said no,” said Chidester. 

 Standing up against wage and benefit cuts, the UFCW Local 663 fought for nearly a year.

The National Guard was even called in to curb the violence when strikebreakers crossed the picket lines. Eventually, though, Hormel hired new workers. They were mostly immigrant men who ushered in a new era for labor. 

“So, the workforce has really changed,” said Macalester College History Professor Peter Rachleff. “What hasn’t changed is that the work itself is brutally physical and demanding, that the work is inadequately compensated and the company is a rigid bargainer.”

Professor Rachleff studied the strike extensively and says empowered workers are striking more now than in the past two decades — and that could include the United Auto Workers that could go on strike as soon as Thursday. 

“The pandemic has taught us that we need to respect and compensate essential workers,” said Rachleff.

The Hormel workers recently marched on Labor Day to highlight their demands — including higher wages and pensions after they say Hormel made record profits. The UFCW says Hormel’s gross profits reached $2.052 billion over the past twelve months.

Their current contract expired on Sunday and the workers will spend Wednesday and Thursday voting on Hormel’s latest offer. The UFCW says it expects results by Friday morning and that workers will decide what’s next after that. 

In a statement, Hormel wrote, “While we are disappointed we have yet to reach an agreement, we remain optimistic. Hormel Foods has had strong working relationships with the UFCW for decades, including in Austin. Our representatives will continue to negotiate in good faith.”

“They’ll come back and they’ll talk again,” said Chidester. “Hormel doesn’t want another strike.”

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries



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Kare11

Tests underway to ensure accurate ballot count in Minnesota

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Elections officials across the state are wrapping up mandatory testing of ballot tabulator machines.

BLAINE, Minn. — The third floor of this town’s city hall is off limits to the public, except when it comes to showing constituents the vote counting equipment is working.

Blaine City Clerk Cathy Sorensen Thursday hosted the public accuracy test for her city’s vote-counting machinery and invited news cameras to come along for the ride.

“The public accuracy test is a great way for anyone from the public to come in and just see for themselves that the machines are working how they are supposed to work,” Sorensen told KARE.

It’s more than just a show-and-tell event. The public accuracy test is part of state law. Every vote tabulating machine in the state has to be tested before each election, and those tests must be open to the public.

Sorensen’s staff had already tested all 32 of their vote scanners before Thursday but re-tested three of them to show the media how the process works.  The exercise serves the dual purpose of ensuring accuracy and building public confidence in the integrity of the election system.

Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, who accompanied Sorensen for the accuracy test, said any machine that fails the exam can’t be used on Election Day.

“They try to trick the elections equipment, to make sure it’s up to snuff for Election Day,” Simon explained.

“They’ll do things like put stray marks on it, they’ll crease it or fold it, they’ll overvote or undervote, or do things they’re not supposed to do, all to try to trick the machine to see if it catches it.”

One of the ballots rejected by a tabulator in Blaine’s test had part of its unique location code scribbled over with ink. That code is designed to ensure the ballot came from the correct precinct.

“It’s a way to make sure that somebody doesn’t bring in a ballot, on their own on Election Day from home,” Sorensen explained.

“So, those ballots are printed and those sequence marks are unique for that precinct. It would be very difficult for somebody to know that code. The sample ballots you can print don’t have real codes on them.”

Under normal circumstances, the media can’t get anywhere close to the third floor where the tabulator machines are stored.  It takes a special badge to get on the floor, and there’s a series of locks that can’t be opened with a master key.

It’s even tougher to access the secret location where absentee ballots are stored waiting to be counted.

“Even getting into the actual election cage there’s an old school padlock that only election officials have, and again it’s just one more layer to make sure we have that chain of custody and that confidence no one was able to access without one of us,” Sorensen said.

The machines themselves are also protected from online tampering.

“We have a rule in Minnesota; no connection to the Internet during voting hours, 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m,” Simon said.

“We have these public accuracy tests on the front end, and then remember on the back end we have good old-fashioned paper. We’re a paper ballot state. We don’t touch finger on a screen, we actually vote the old-fashioned way.”

Simon said those ballots are stored for two years and can be used to settle any challenges to the machine count.



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Nearly all of MN is abnormally dry

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“Could be a dry September to dry October, back to back,” Brennan Dettmann, a meteorologist at NWS Twin Cities, said.

CHANHASSEN, Minn. — Rain has been more than difficult to come by recently – it’s been almost nonexistent. 

The National Weather Service Twin Cities reports that it has measured barely a trace of precipitation, marking another stretch of dry weather.

“Could be a dry September to dry October, back to back,” Brennan Dettmann, a meteorologist at NWS Twin Cities, said.

“There’s been periods of normalcy, but certainly has been a lot of record-setting conditions that we’ve seen this past year,” he continued.

This past year has seen many records added or broken. December to February was the warmest winter on record. March to May was the 10th warmest spring.

Last month was both the warmest and driest September ever in Minnesota.

Those trends also include a shift from the heavy rains we saw over the summer to dry conditions right now.

“We’re not alone in Minnesota and Wisconsin, but certainly, yeah, it has been a quick uptick from what it’s been from the spring and early part of the summer,” he said.

The U.S. Drought Monitor shows 97% of Minnesota under abnormally dry conditions.

That’s why NWS Twin Cities issued a red flag warning for nearly all of Minnesota Thursday.

“With the drought, you know, there hasn’t been any precipitation in a while, things are just generally dry,” Dettmann said. “So you get something to spark, it can very quickly spread with the aid of those gusty winds pushing in, you know, any fires that form. So that’s the main reason for having the red flag warning.”

If you’re looking for relief, don’t count on it coming anytime soon.

“Expecting it to stay dry into the end of October,” Dettmann said.

With little precipitation coming soon, expect to see these reminders of fire danger continue – whether there’s a warning or not.

“You’ll likely see that continue into the end of October and November, as long as there’s no major precipitation that falls during that time frame,” Dettmann said.



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This years MEA conference focuses on students mental health

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According to the CDC, 40% of students experience sadness and hopelessness on a regular basis.

ST PAUL, Minn. — At this year’s Minnesota Educators’ Academy (MEA), the main focus was how to better students’ mental health. MEA is the largest development opportunity for educators in Minnesota, and gives teachers the opportunity to learn ways to improve in the classroom and handle the forever-changing needs of students.

“We need more counselors, we need more social workers, school psychologists, school nurses, people who really know their stuff,” said Education Minnesota President Denise Specht. “There are some schools that only have a counselor one day a week. We simply need more teams to address the needs.”

Specht also said having smaller class sizes would help teachers build stronger relationships with their students, potentially bettering their mental health.

According to the CDC, 40% of students experience sadness and hopelessness on a regular basis. Student teacher Caitlin Efta feels social media is playing a large part. 

“There’s a lot of bullying and other things that happen online, and a lot of kids are just falling victim to that,” Efta said.

Minnesota’s 2024 teacher of the year Tracy Byrd says to improve students mental health, we need to take the stress off of them.

“Just by letting them know, relax, you are enough, you are okay,” Byrd said. “Don’t put too much pressure on this one assignment or this one test or this one book.”



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